SF Bay Area Transportation Management Systems: An Innovative DOT and - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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SF Bay Area Transportation Management Systems: An Innovative DOT and - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

SF Bay Area Transportation Management Systems: An Innovative DOT and MPO Partnership Radiah Victor Principal, Operations Metropolitan Transportation Commission Oakland, California ITS CA Annual Meeting October 1, 2013 Outline 1. Overview of Bay


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SLIDE 1

SF Bay Area Transportation Management Systems: An Innovative DOT and MPO Partnership

Radiah Victor Principal, Operations Metropolitan Transportation Commission Oakland, California

ITS CA Annual Meeting October 1, 2013

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SLIDE 2

Outline

  • 1. Overview of Bay Area Infrastructure
  • 2. Regional Challenges
  • Condition of Highway Infrastructure
  • Constrained Funding & Staff Resources
  • 3. Transportation Management Systems
  • Field Equipment Performance
  • 4. Future Efforts/TMS Vision
  • 5. Innovative Partnership with Caltrans District 4

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SLIDE 3

San Francisco Bay Area Overview

  • Seven million residents
  • 2nd most congested region in

US.

  • More than 4.6 million cars
  • 20,000 miles of local streets

and roads

  • 1,420 miles of highway
  • 450 miles of carpool lanes
  • 8 toll bridges
  • 28+ transit agencies
  • Extensive ITS infrastructure

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SLIDE 4

SF Bay Area State Highway ITS Infrastructure

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  • 2,500 traffic detection

stations

  • 140 changeable message

signs

  • 390 cameras (traffic

monitoring & incident management)

  • 380 ramp metering systems
  • Regional TMC
  • Call boxes, Freeway Service Patrol, 511 traveler information
  • Express Lanes & Integrated Corridor Management
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SLIDE 5

Performance: Freeway Sensors

  • Statewide sensors reliability goal: 70%
  • For the past year, only ~50% of sensors installed in the

roadway have been functional

Suspected Errors

  • Sept. 2011
  • Sept. 2012

Ctlr Down (22 %) Other Errors (3 %) Card Off (70 %) High Value (5 %)

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SLIDE 6

Regional Challenges: Constrained Funding & Staff Resources

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  • “…dealing with

preservation shortfalls has an exponential fiscal impact (the less you do today, the more it will cost you tomorrow).” Caltrans Program Review—July 2012.

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SLIDE 7

Transportation Management System

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Current Field Equipment Operational Status

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93% 84% 58% 48%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% 1/11 1/18 1/25 2/1 2/8 2/15 2/22 3/1 3/8 3/15 3/22 3/29 4/5 4/12 4/19 4/26 5/3 5/10 5/17 5/24 5/31 6/7 6/14 6/21 6/28 7/5 7/12 7/19 7/26

Percent Operational

Ramp Meters CMS Traffic Detection Stations CCTV Cameras

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SLIDE 9

Field Equipment Operational Trends

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10 20 30 40 50 60 1/11 1/25 2/8 2/22 3/8 3/22 4/5 4/19 5/3

CMS Repaired vs. Newly Failed

Cumulative fixed Cumulative new failures 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 1/11 1/25 2/8 2/22 3/8 3/22 4/5 4/19 5/3

Ramp Meters Repaired vs. Newly Failed

Cumulative fixed Cumulative new failures 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 1/11 1/25 2/8 2/22 3/8 3/22 4/5 4/19 5/3

CCTV Cameras Repaired vs. Newly Failed

Cumulative fixed Cumulative new failures 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 1/11 1/25 2/8 2/22 3/8 3/22 4/5 4/19 5/3

Detection Repaired vs. Newly Failed

Cumulative fixed Cumulative new failures

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Regional Investment Strategy

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TMS Maintenance and Replacement 26% ($700M)

Field Equipment 19% ($514M) Incident Management 13% ($365M) Arterial Management 5% ($150M)

Plan Bay Area ($2.7B) Transportation 2035 ($1.3B)

Field Equipment 46% ($600M) TMS Maintenance and Replacement 48% ($625M) Arterial Management 2% ($30M)

Operations 37% ($1,000M)

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SLIDE 11

TMS Governance Principles

Performance

  • Define performance targets to optimize operations.
  • Achieve TMS operational benefits across multiple systems and programs.

Decision Making

  • Adopt a performance management approach.
  • Streamline TMS decision‐making and prioritization.
  • Ensure accountability and transparency.
  • Secure a management stake.

Resources

  • Strategically manage the system within the resources available.
  • Leverage regional contribution to secure funding commitment from state.

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Shared TMS Vision

A regional, integrated Bay Area freeway network that provides a safe and reliable travel experience for the region’s travelers. To achieve this we will:

  • Actively manage our network infrastructure and assets;
  • Be responsive to our customers’ need for a consistent

travel experience across the region;

  • Place a high priority on the safety and security needs of
  • ur travelers and network infrastructure investments;

and

  • Utilize our fiscal and staff resources in a manner that is

effective and fiscally responsible.

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Innovative Partnership with Caltrans D4

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TMS Field Equipment Sample Performance Targets High Priority Assets Second Priority Assets Changeable Messages Signs 95% 80% Ramp Metering 95% 80% CCTV Cameras 95% 80% Traffic Monitoring Systems 70% 60%

Sample TMS Performance Targets Moving towards a performance‐based TMS program

Shared Goal

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SLIDE 14

TMS Strategic Planning Efforts Underway to Support Active Traffic Management

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Contact:

Radiah Victor

rvictor@mtc.ca.gov www.mtc.ca.gov

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TMS Needs Assessment

Assessment is underway to identify common field equipment issues and resolution strategies:

  • Copper wire theft
  • Software repairs
  • Equipment failure rates
  • Trend analysis

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Analysis of the type, frequency and cost of repairs will inform future resource requests

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SLIDE 17

Performance: CCTV Cameras

  • Upgraded 390 CCTV cameras
  • 186 are operational
  • Communication infrastructure

needs investment

Communication Infrastructure % of Cameras Reliability ISDN 93% Poor DSL 3% Good Fiber 2% Excellent T‐1 1% Good Wireless 1% Fair

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SLIDE 18

Performance: Ramp Metering

To be expanded from 380 locations (40% of system) to 500 locations (53% of the system) by 2015

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Performance: Changeable Message Signs

  • 140 CMS ‐ 33 with Travel Times
  • Caltrans calculates the CMS travel

times

  • 511 conducts performance

monitoring of CMS travel times

  • Due to advances in technology,

511 uses GPS probe‐based data, provided by INRIX, at lower cost and greater coverage

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